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Manjimup
Latitude : 34 15 S Longitude
: 116 09 E
The townsite of Manjimup
is located in the south west, 304 km south of Perth. Manjimup is an
Aboriginal name said to be derived from "Manjin", a broad
leafed marsh flag with an edible root valued as an article of diet
by Aborigines. These plants apparently grew prolifically below a spring
in the area. The earliest white settlers in this region were Charles
Rose and Frank Hall in 1859. Hall's property passed to J. Mottram
who named his homestead "Manjimup House" in the 1860s. Also,
in 1863 a local brook was recorded by surveyor T. Treen as Manjimup
Brook.
By the late 1890s demand
for quality agricultural land in Western Australia focused attention
on the heavily forested areas near Manjimup. A report by surveyor
Terry in 1898 identified good land on the Wilgarup River, and an Agricultural
Area was declared. There was also some demand for small lots, and
in 1902 lots were surveyed near Balbarrup and it was decided to declare
a townsite. The Nelson Roads Board nominated Manjimup as a name, and
the townsite of Manjimupp was gazetted in 1903. The double "P"
spelling was used because the Lands Department had adopted spelling
rules for Aboriginal names where doubling a consonant shortened the
following vowel (otherwise the pronunciation could have been Manjimoop).
In 1909 the government
decided to extend the railway from Bridgetown to Wilgarup. The terminus
of the line was to be close to the original Manjimup homestead, which
is about 5 km west of the 1903 townsite. The proposed station was
named Manjimup, and a subdivision was recommended at the site. The
new townsite was named Manjimupp, and gazettal took place in 1910.
The original Manjimupp was renamed to Balbarrup the same year. The
locally accepted spelling however was Manjimup, and the double "P"
was officially changed in 1915.The railway line was opened for traffic
in 1911.
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